[[11]] Luke xi, 5.
[[12]] Mark ix, 36, enagkalisámenos.
[[13]] Gospel History, p. 285.
[[14]] I believe that the allusion to dogs has been thrown back into Jesus' words from the woman's reply, and that she was the first to mention them. Note Mark's emphatic phrase dià toûton tòn lógon; vii, 29.
[[15]] Gospel History, p. 93 f. (with map).
[[16]] The steady gaze and the pause are mentioned by the Gospels, in more than one place, as preceding utterance. There are of course great variations in the accounts of the last supper.
[[17]] xxii, 28.
[[18]] The author of Rab and his Friends.
[[19]] ix, 36.
[[20]] Cf. ad Diognetum, cited on p. 177.